Free Resources

We're Here to Help You Understand

Maria has put together these free guides and tools to help you make sense of your options. No jargon, no pressure. Take what you need — and call us when you're ready.

Check Your Situation

These free tools can help you understand where you stand. They are not a substitute for legal advice, but they are a good place to start.

Probate Cost Calculator

Find out what California probate would cost your family. Enter the estimated total value of the estate (home, accounts, investments) and see the statutory fees.

Statutory attorney fee
Statutory executor fee
Total combined fees

Want to avoid these costs? A living trust can help your family skip probate entirely. Talk to Maria about a trust.

Estate Plan Risk Assessment

Answer 8 quick yes/no questions to see how prepared your family is right now.

1. Do you own property in California?
2. Do you have children under 18?
3. Are you married or in a domestic partnership?
4. Do you have a living trust?
5. Have you updated your estate plan in the last 3 years?
6. Do you own a business or have business partners?
7. Do you have a family member with special needs?
8. Are your beneficiary designations up to date?

Free Guides Provided by the MVP Team

Each guide is written in plain language. Enter your name and email and we will send it right to your inbox. We never share your information with anyone.

The California Estate Planning Checklist

A step by step checklist of everything your family needs: trusts, wills, powers of attorney, healthcare directives, beneficiary designations, and more.

Probate in California: What Your Family Needs to Know

How probate works, what it costs, how long it takes, and the steps you can take today to help your family avoid it entirely.

Asset Protection for Business Owners

How LLCs, irrevocable trusts, and liability shields work together to protect your business and personal assets from lawsuits and creditors.

Special Needs Planning Guide

How to provide for a loved one with disabilities without disqualifying them from SSI, Medi-Cal, or other government benefits. First party, third party, and pooled trust options explained.

Understanding Bankruptcy: Your Options Explained

A clear comparison of Chapter 7 and Chapter 13 bankruptcy in California: eligibility, timeline, what you keep, and how to decide which path is right for you.

Planning for Blended Families

How to use trusts and wills to protect your spouse, your children, and your stepchildren. QTIP trusts, separate property, and avoiding unintended disinheritance.

Myth vs. Reality

There is a lot of misinformation out there. Here is what Maria wants you to know.

"I'm not wealthy enough for estate planning."
Reality

Everyone who owns property, has children, or has any assets at all needs an estate plan. Without one, the state of California decides what happens to everything you have built — and your family will go through probate, which is public, expensive, and slow.

"A will avoids probate."
Reality

A will goes through probate. It does not avoid it. Only a living trust allows your assets to transfer to your loved ones without the cost, delay, and public exposure of the probate process.

"My spouse automatically gets everything."
Reality

In California, it depends on whether assets are community property or separate property. Without a plan, your spouse may receive only a portion of your estate, with the rest going to children, parents, or siblings under California's intestacy laws.

"Bankruptcy ruins your life."
Reality

Most people who file for bankruptcy begin rebuilding their credit within 2 years. Bankruptcy is a legal protection designed to give people a fresh start. It is not a failure — it is a tool, and it works.

"I can do my own trust online."
Reality

DIY trusts are often unfunded, improperly drafted, or legally invalid. If the trust is not funded (meaning your assets are not retitled into it), it provides no protection at all. Many of our clients come to us after discovering their online trust would not hold up.

"Power of attorney lasts after death."
Reality

A power of attorney expires the moment you pass away. After that, only a successor trustee (if you have a trust) or a court-appointed executor (if you do not) has authority over your affairs. This is one of the most common misunderstandings in estate planning.

Maria V. Primushko, Esq.

You Are Not Alone — and It Can Be Fixed

If you created a DIY trust, transferred assets without legal advice, or feel like your plan might have gaps — you are not alone. Many of our clients come to us after realizing something is not right. The good news: most situations can be fixed. Maria has helped families untangle complicated situations, and she can help you, too.

Let's Review Your Situation

Latest Legal Insights

In depth articles on the estate planning topics that matter most to California families.

View All Articles

Share Your Feedback

Have a suggestion, found something that needs fixing, or want to share an idea? Let us know.

Maria V. Primushko, Esq.

Ready to Protect Your Family?

Schedule a free, no-obligation consultation with Maria. We will listen, explain your options, and help you build a plan that fits your family.

Get Your Free Guide

Enter your name and email below and we will send it right to your inbox.

Your information is never shared. Ever.

Check Your Inbox

Your guide is on its way. If you do not see it within a few minutes, check your spam folder.